“Thank you, Corporal. My compliments to the General, and I’m on my way.”
Maggie shuts the door behind the courier and turns to Koda and Kirsten with a smile. “Thanks for the backup.” Her eyes become suddenly solemn. “This is the way it’s going to be from now on, you know,” she says softly. “Every unknown person will represent a possible danger. Everything unexplained will be potentially lethal until it is either explained or neutralized.” The Colonel’s gaze shifts to Kirsten. “Women will hold most of the positions of authority in whatever society we have left. We will occupy most of the professions that survive. We will do most of the fighting until the droids are contained. After that happens, we’ll still do most of the fighting—against other women, most likely—and the nation building. The rest of our lives will look a whole lot like tonight.”
A tight smile pulls at Kirsten’s mouth, but there is no irony in her voice. “Forward—into the past.”
“Back to the beginning,” Koda murmurs. And her dream is with her again, the landscape of first creation before humans grew away from Ina Maka and her other children and power belonged to her and her daughters only. With the eyes of vision Koda watches as Kirsten fades, to be replaced by a woman in a brief leather skirt and halter and a towering mask with a bird’s face and a mane of grass and feathers. When she tears her eyes away, Maggie is gone, too, her form melted into the shape of a woman with golden skin and knives glittering in either hand. Between one breath and the next the images vanish, and she is standing in the hallway with two other half-clothed women, cold and in need of coffee. “I’ll make breakfast,” she says, and follows Maggie back to the bedroom to dress.
Fifteen minutes later, Maggie pulls out of the drive with an insulated mug of coffee and a slice of Themungha’s fry bread wrapped around a scrambled egg. Koda can hear water splashing in the bathroom a couple yards down the small cross-hall that connects the entrance to the back of the house as Kirsten showers, and a hint of Maggie’s lavender-scented soap mingles with the aromas of dark-roasted Columbian coffee and melting butter. Koda sets out more of Themunga’s frybread, together with the fresh milk and eggs her mother has sent with her. The eggs are brown, and while Koda’s scientific mind knows very well that their shells merely reflect the color of the hens who laid them, she cannot quite shed her mother’s utter conviction that they are somehow tastier and more nutritious than the white variety. A psychologist might put that down to her mother’s feelings about race, she muses, but she knows too many white farmers and ranchers who are equally convinced. Face it, she tells herself as she sets to chopping sweet onion and tomato, they are better, and there’s no particular reason why.
The rich aroma of sautéd onion and tomato wafts into Kirsten’s room as she pulls on her boots and sweater, mingling in an odd harmony with the herbal soap whose fragrance lingers on her skin. It reminds her, a little, of weekend forays across the border into Tijuana and the exotic prizes waiting in the open air markets for a ten-year-old child with too little companionship and perhaps too much imagination. It reminds her, too, of Twenty-Nine Palms and Los Jacales, the tiny but imcomparable Mexican restaurant just outside the base where she and her parents had breakfast every Sunday. The memory is a small pang in her heart, almost physical, sharper than the ache left by the defibrillators and the bruises that linger on her chest. Carefully she removes a small woven straw box from the pants she wore the previous day and transfers it to her pocket. Guatemalan worry dolls, nearly twenty years old now, bought for her one bright summer day by her father. She still remembers the names she gave each of them, the stories she built about each bright thread-wrapped figure.
They are one of her few remaining material links to the past. Oddly, they seem now as much a talisman of the future as a relic of her childhood. The indigenous peoples they represent, the traditional societies, have the best chance of survival now. As she opens her door and steps into the hall, it comes to her that somehow in the last few days the past has loosened its hold on her. Or she on it; she is not quite sure which it is. For the first time since her flight from Washington, the future has a habitation and a name. It is not just that the earth has not, despite the horror, ground to a halt in its orbit. Somewhere in the depths of her mind is the recognition that, against all odds, she may somehow live to see the birth of a new and very different world.
And that may not be a bad thing. Not a bad thing at all.
She has Asi, whose return she would call miraculous if she were inclined to believe in miracles. And she has—no, not friends exactly—colleagues and companions who share her purpose. “Morning,” she says to one of them as she steps into the kitchen. The window over the sink frames a square of black sky, and she winces. “Middle of the night. Whatever.”
Dakota turns her attention briefly from the stove to smile at her. “Morning. Breakfast’s almost ready.” She nods at the table, where a cup of coffee already steams on one of the two placemats. “Have a seat.”
Kirsten shovels sugar into her cup, together with a generous dollop of cream. The adrenaline rush of an hour ago is gone, and she can feel reaction beginning to set in, her blood sugar starting to slide. The caffeine and glucose hit her system like a thunderbolt, finishing the job the hot water has begun. From underneath her lashes, she watches the other woman as she prepares their meal, moving around the room with the abrupt, angular grace of one of the great predators—a cheetah, perhaps, or a wolf. She wears the same plaid flannel shirt she had on earlier, but now it is tucked neatly into the waistband of the jeans that do little to conceal the taut elegance of her legs. Her hair, which had flowed over her shoulders like a river at midnight, is now caught back with a rubber band. It still sets off the sharp planes of her cheekbones and forehead, the generous lines of her mouth, the inexplicable blue eyes.
Kirsten feels heat rising in her cheeks that has nothing to do with the coffee or its effects. She feels suddenly disoriented, as if the room had suddenly turned itself upside down to leave her hanging weightless from the ceiling. To cover her confusion, she asks, “What do you think is going on?”
Dakota—Koda—gives the thickening eggs a stir and slaps two rounds of frybread down on the stove’s surface to heat. “The droids have to take us out if they can. There’s too much still functional. We’ve raided them successfully—” With a swift movement of her bare fingers, she turns both pieces of bread. “—and that makes us too big a threat for them to leave alone.”
“So those small groups the Corporal was talking about are likely to join up and attack the base again?”
“If we sit still for them.” Koda dishes up the eggs onto the frybread, rolls them up and drops them onto warmed plates. “My guess is we won’t.”
“At least the number of the military models is limited. That’s some small comfort.”
“Not enough to make up for bombing the factory, though.” Koda sets down the plates and takes a seat. Her eyes meet Kirsten’s across the table. “If not for that—”
“I’d have more than the partial code. It might all be over.” She holds that intense blue gaze, unwilling to be less than honest. “Look, I come from a military family. You don’t have to explain the brass’ fuck-ups to me. It’s par for the course.”
Koda nods. “Tacoma has some stories that would curl your hair. Insufficient ammunition, garbled orders.”
Kirsten reaches for a fork, then stops as Dakota picks up her roll taco-style and bites into it. Following suit, she reaches for a napkin as butter runs down her chin. “Good,” she says. You’re a good cook.”
“Not especially. I grew up helping my mother get meals for a large family. Lots of practice is all.”
From underneath the table, Asi whines, and Kirsten pinches a bit off the end of her roll. Koda does the same, dropping the bite into his bowl. It disappears in less than a nanosecond. Dakota grins. “Spoiled.”
“Rotten,” Kirsten agrees, breaking off a second morsel. It vanishes from her fingers in even less time. “You going to the clinic again today?”
“For the morning, anyway. You?”
“Work on the code till it drives me nuts. Take Asi for a walk till I can think straight again.”
“Anything I can get you that would help? Discs, a printer—?”
Kirsten shakes her head and pushes her chair away from the table. “I had a good supply in my truck.” As she rises, an odd thought strikes her, and she asks, “Animals mean something in your traditions, don’t they? Symbolically, that is.”
The Lakota woman’s withdrawal is both instant and almost imperceptible. There was a time, Kirsten thinks, when I wouldn’t have noticed that. “I don’t mean to be disrespectful. Asi found a raccoon yesterday, and I just thought it was odd. Don’t they hibernate?”
“No, not exactly. They sleep a lot, living off their fat. They come out of their dens to feed periodically, though.”
“So it doesn’t necessarily mean the cold is going to let up some?” Shift the context. For some reason it is important to her not to offend this woman. “I’ve never seen so damned much snow in my life.”
“No, I’m afraid not.”
Kirsten shrugs and moves toward the door. “Too bad.”
Koda’s voice stops her where she stands. “It means disguise, Kirsten, and the need to let go of old identities. It means transformation.”
And it is with her again, that long spiraling plunge toward death and the deep baying of the hunter who runs lithe beside her, a glimpse of driving muscles rippling under grey fur that turns in upon itself, moebius-like, to become a small pointed face with eyes burning like molten gold out of a black mask. The narrow muzzle opens, and the creature speaks in a voice to silence thunder, one long-fingered hand raised to bar her passage.
Go back. The time is not yet.
Her heart pounds in her chest like a trip hammer; sweat prickles along her skin. The time is not yet.
“Thank you,” she says, and flees.
Again.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
THE DAY IS gray. Gray clouds, gray snow, gray faces of people walking along shoveled and salted paths. Even Asi’s vibrant coat looks washed out and dull as he plods along behind Kirsten, head bobbing like a tired draft horse on his way to the stables.
An almost pleasant sense of melancholia steels over her and she quickens her step, outpacing her thoughts, content to exist simply for and in this one moment in time. Life passes by, its stories writ large on the faces of the men and women with whom she shares this space.
As she wanders down a ruler-straight path, her steps take her to a scene that stops her, and makes her wish for perhaps the first time in her life that she had been born with the ability to draw. Before her stands a woman of no more than twenty whose life has painted age upon her face and form far beyond her years. Directly in front of her, pressed back to belly, is a girl-child, dirty, bedraggled, and pale as a wraith. The young woman has her arms crossed over the shoulders and chest of the girl in a gesture of desperate possession, as if she is the only thing of worth left in a world gone totally mad. The expression in the woman’s eyes transports Kirsten back in time to when she, herself, was a young girl standing in St. Peter’s in Rome, staring at the Pieta and wondering how simple stone could engender such profound emotions within her.
The child’s soft “hello” brings Kirsten back to the present, and she offers up a smile that is equal parts welcoming and sad.
“Pretty doggie.”
As if agreeing, Asi sits proudly and offers up a soft chuff, causing the young girl to giggle. “What’s his name?”
“Asimov.”
The girl looks a little confused. “Asmimoff?”
“That’s pretty close,” Kirsten commends, smiling. “He likes being called Asi.”
“Asi?” The child looks up at her mother for confirmation before returning her attention to the dog. “Asi.”
Asimov gives a louder bark, which makes the girl jump. Her mother tightens her grip, fright winging its way across her haggard face.
“It’s okay,” Kirsten hastens to reassure. “He won’t hurt you. I promise.”
The girl seems convinced. She lifts a small, dirty hand, fingers splayed wide. “Pet?”
Ever the ham, Asimov lifts his left paw, giving the young girl a doggie grin and another soft chuff. Kirsten laughs. “I think he’d like that.”
Responding to the pleading look from her daughter, the woman slowly—surely ice ages have come and gone in less time—relaxes her desperate grip. The child steps forward cautiously. Asi keeps his calm, one paw still raised. The girl takes it gently in both hands, then giggles as Asi covers her face with generous swipes of his tongue. Stepping away, she wipes her face with both hands. “Funny doggie. All wet!” Pulling her hands away from her eyes, she gifts Kirsten with a bright, innocent smile. “What’s your name?”
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